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Best stain and sealer for wooden front door?
Posted on 2/9/25 at 7:07 am
Posted on 2/9/25 at 7:07 am
Looking for recommendations of the best stain and sealer for my wooden front door and composite porch posts. This will be the fifth time refinishing them in the six years since I built. Unfortunately, they are in the sun all afternoon long.


Posted on 2/9/25 at 7:08 am to tigerbelly
I can't say enough about dark walnut Ready Seal I bought at Lowes
Posted on 2/9/25 at 8:01 am to tigerbelly
General Finishes gel stain. Goes on line paint, so prep is much easier. Follow that with General Finishes Exterior 450.
Posted on 2/9/25 at 8:31 am to meeple
I agree with the General Finishes recommendation.
You can also look into this product. https://linseedoilpaint.com/
You can also look into this product. https://linseedoilpaint.com/
Posted on 2/9/25 at 8:47 am to tigerbelly
I got tired of refinishing my doors and had them painted instead in “faux stain”.
It lasted almost 10 years at my last house and has been on for 6 in my current one and still looks fine.
If in the BR Area, Rice Sutton is who I have used.
ETA: my rear cypress posts are stained, and I’ve used Helsman Spar polyurethane and it normally last a couple years before I have to reapply with a roller.
It lasted almost 10 years at my last house and has been on for 6 in my current one and still looks fine.
If in the BR Area, Rice Sutton is who I have used.
ETA: my rear cypress posts are stained, and I’ve used Helsman Spar polyurethane and it normally last a couple years before I have to reapply with a roller.
This post was edited on 2/9/25 at 8:49 am
Posted on 2/9/25 at 8:50 am to tigerbelly
Old Masters Spar Varnish and a MinWax stain after lite sanding every 2 years. The door gets brutal afternoon sun especially in summer. I skipped frequent door maintenance for a long time and had to replace the door twice. The current pampered door has lasted 15 years.
I'm don't know if there is much difference among brands of spar. Just be sure to get one that's marine grade. Very dry wood will such up a lot.
I'm don't know if there is much difference among brands of spar. Just be sure to get one that's marine grade. Very dry wood will such up a lot.
Posted on 2/9/25 at 9:06 am to tigerbelly
Do you have spar varnish on there currently? Kind of looks like it in the pictures. I used that for a few years but realized once it starts cracking then you are screwed. Had to sand down my columns to fresh wood. Ill never use it again.
I switched to TWP sealer a few years ago. Just pressure wash and reapply once every 2 years or so. No more sanding for me and it applies super easy with a roller or brush.
I switched to TWP sealer a few years ago. Just pressure wash and reapply once every 2 years or so. No more sanding for me and it applies super easy with a roller or brush.
Posted on 2/9/25 at 9:28 am to Zakatak
Yes I do have a spar varnish on it. It’s sanded down every year and reapplied. I’ll look into TWP sealer this time.
Everything is going to get painted if I keep having to mess with this every year.
Everything is going to get painted if I keep having to mess with this every year.
Posted on 2/9/25 at 9:29 am to LSUtigerME
I will go this route next time I have to redo them. I just need to find someone in Lafourche Parish that does a decent job.
Posted on 2/9/25 at 9:58 am to tigerbelly
I had the same problems until I got this. if its good enough for boats it's good enough for my front door.
LINK
LINK
Posted on 2/10/25 at 9:53 am to tigerbelly
You’re saying spar varnish doesn’t do the trick? I do my front door and poles every year or so and they look great compared to the folks in the neighborhood who don’t.
This is what I use
Eta: that door and posts look bad. Mine get sun most of the day and they are super shiny and wet looking still
This is what I use
Eta: that door and posts look bad. Mine get sun most of the day and they are super shiny and wet looking still
This post was edited on 2/10/25 at 9:55 am
Posted on 7/30/25 at 4:58 pm to tigerbelly
You can do what I did.
Take some good dimensions with pictures of the hinge cutouts and all, bring it to Lockport Farm Market and get them to order you some new fiberglass doors, you'll be fighting that as long as you own that house. As far as the post, I replaced mine with fiberglass ones, I re-stained it once in 5 years.
Take some good dimensions with pictures of the hinge cutouts and all, bring it to Lockport Farm Market and get them to order you some new fiberglass doors, you'll be fighting that as long as you own that house. As far as the post, I replaced mine with fiberglass ones, I re-stained it once in 5 years.
Posted on 7/30/25 at 10:24 pm to tigerbelly
I had similar doors on my last house. I think some of your problem is the glass sweating and running down on the raised panels (I had the same problem ) I used mcclosky man o war spar varnish without stain. 14 coats on the exterior, 8 on the interior. I then caulked the windows with Lexel sealant so water couldn’t get behind the wood. Looked amazing and should last 5-10 years or longer with maintenance (I moved after a year and 1/2, so I can’t confirm)
This was almost certainly more work than most people want to invest in refinishing a front door, but I enjoyed making it pristine.
Edit: I primed the mahogany with smiths multi wood epoxy and applied the first coat of varnish while the penetrating epoxy was still tacky. Pretty much treated it like a wood boat.
This was almost certainly more work than most people want to invest in refinishing a front door, but I enjoyed making it pristine.
Edit: I primed the mahogany with smiths multi wood epoxy and applied the first coat of varnish while the penetrating epoxy was still tacky. Pretty much treated it like a wood boat.
This post was edited on 7/30/25 at 10:39 pm
Posted on 7/31/25 at 9:10 am to PapaPogey
I used minwax helmsman, think I did like 4-5 coats and made sure to seal the windows to the wood with the varnish and seal the door panel joints. Only refinished once as we moved from that house long ago.
The door windows were single pane so they sweated like a mofo, the bottom half of the door caught direct afternoon sunlight.
The door windows were single pane so they sweated like a mofo, the bottom half of the door caught direct afternoon sunlight.
This post was edited on 7/31/25 at 9:12 am
Posted on 8/2/25 at 9:13 pm to tigerbelly
stain with whatever color (general finishes) and top with Man-o war (marine/satin) cut with solvent and put 3/4 coats. Will last (and look new) a couple years
LINK
LINK
Posted on 8/3/25 at 12:57 pm to tigerbelly
Makes me so happy with our decision to have no exposed wood outside our home.
Posted on 8/3/25 at 3:14 pm to Megasaurus
Yes, after 45+yrs of sanding and refinishing our front leaded glass door and side lights with Helmsman Marine finish, we called Sherwin Williams and they recommended Man O War. We removed all of the finish down to bare wood and stained lightest color. Looks like a new door. Well worth $100 a gallon!!! We even refinished the cypress post and beams on our outdoor kitchen facing hot west sun everyday.
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